Advent Song for December 3: Skating

I have four separate ways to cheer you up today, depending on how much time you have. If you have 25 minutes, you can watch A Charlie Brown Christmas, right here and now. If you only have two minutes, you can listen to the Vince Guaraldi Trio perform Skating from the same film; if you have thirty seconds you can read this story (on Dezeen, which is one of the most interesting and thoughtful sites about design that I know) about Prada being the first luxury brand to take out a loan whose repayment terms are directly linked to sustainability targets; and if you only have five seconds you can just read the headline and skip the story itself. I do recommend the first one, though, and you might as well click below anyway, now you’re here.

Advent song(s) for December 23: An Austrian-German double bill

I have aways had a few more songs floating around my list than there was strictly going to be time for, and since tomorrow’s song is all tied up and has been since before we started, today is the last chance to sneak in a spare. Also, I feel like today is the last day before Christmas when you might have time to stop and listen to three different songs (I have included two versions of one of them). Tomorrow is a short sharp burst of Christmas goodness, but today let’s wallow in it.

From Austria, here is the lovely Stille Nacht, composed by Father Joseph Mohr and Franz Xaver Gruber in the early part of the nineteeth century, first performed on Christmas Eve 1818 in Oberndorf bei Salzburg and just about the most famous Christmas song in the world (or maybe the second most famous, but more on that another time). There is almost nobody you can think of who hasn’t recorded a version at some point, but for authenticity’s sake here is the Vienna Boys’ Choir, sounding as good as you’d expect them to:

Today’s second song is O Tannenbaum, which started out as a Silesian folk song, was turned into a tragic love song by Joachim August de Zarnack in 1819 and then, by the addition in 1824 by Ernst Anschütz of two more verses, into a Christmas song, and don’t say I never spoil you because today you are getting two versions: a gorgeous German one sung by the Tölzer Knabenchor, and the Vince Guaraldi Trio’s arrangement for A Charlie Brown Christmas, because that’s the one that really makes me feel Christmassy.

(If you object to the Hollywoodification of a traditional and originally non-Christmassy song, incidentally, you might want to exercise caution when visiting tomorrow, and if you think you can guess the final song from that clue let me know and if you’re right I’ll send you a prize.)